In IPv6 networking, the IPV6_V6ONLY flag is used to ensure that a socket will only use IPv6, and in particular that IPv4-to-IPv6 mapping won't be used for that socket. On many OS's, the IPV6_V6ONLY is not set by default, but on some OS's (e.g. Windows 7), it is set by default.
My question is: What was the motivation for introducing this flag? Is there something about IPv4-to-IPv6 mapping that was causing problems, and thus people needed a way to disable it? It would seem to me that if someone didn't want to use IPv4-to-IPv6 mapping, they could simply not specify a IPv4-mapped IPv6 address. What am I missing here?
Not all IPv6 capable platforms support dualstack sockets so the question becomes how do applications needing to maximimize IPv6 compatibility either know dualstack is supported or bind separatly when its not? The only universal answer is IPV6_V6ONLY.
An application ignoring IPV6_V6ONLY or written before dualstack capable IP stacks existed may find binding separatly to V4 fails in a dualstack environment as the IPv6 dualstack socket bind to IPv4 preventing IPv4 socket binding. The application may also not be expecting IPv4 over IPv6 due to protocol or application level addressing concerns or IP access controls.
This or similar situations most likely prompted MS et al to default to 1 even tho RFC3493 declares 0 to be default. 1 theoretically maximizes backwards compatibility. Specifically Windows XP/2003 does not support dualstack sockets.
There are also no shortage of applications which unfortunately need to pass lower layer information to operate correctly and so this option can be quite useful for planning a IPv4/IPv6 compatibility strategy that best fits the requirements and existing codebases.